Joined Feb 2010
L9: Master
Forum Thread
How long should you be in a relationship before popping the ?
October 22, 2010 at
07:16 AM
in
Chat
Other thread about how did you meet and how did they propose made me think of this since I saw a varying of lengths that people were together before the ? came...
What are peoples opinions?
Edit: Thanks brisar for updating the spelling
What are peoples opinions?
Edit: Thanks brisar for updating the spelling
102 Comments
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He worked midnights (4pm to 4am) while we dated and were engaged (nearly 2 years total). He switched to day shift about the time we got married and then it was easy to see that he had an alcohol problem. I went to work at 4pm and he went right from work to the bar and would drink until 10. Then he'd go home and get in bed and I was none the wiser until the credit card bill came ($1500 of bar tab anyone?). This went on for a few months and I confronted him about it and told him it was not acceptable. He told me he didn't see a problem and he wasn't going to change. So I got a divorce.
In the five year relationship we talked about getting married a lot but my timeframe always got closer and his was always further away. He and I are still friends and have discussed this at length. He said he never really wanted to get married but didn't want to lose me. Interestingly enough he's now almost 40 and has never been married. I'm no psychologist but I'd say there are some commitment issues afoot there.
So your policy cost you not once, but twice?
From where I sit you lost someone who didn't want to get married but wanted to be with you, and you also had to go through a divorce because you were in a rush to get married. If you would have taken your time dating this guy, it seems you would have figured out he was an alcoholic eventually...
The 1 year or bust policy seems to do a lot more harm than good.
From where I sit you lost someone who didn't want to get married but wanted to be with you, and you also had to go through a divorce because you were in a rush to get married. If you would have taken your time dating this guy, it seems you would have figured out he was an alcoholic eventually...
The 1 year or bust policy seems to do a lot more harm than good.
And I think not having the one year rule worked against me in the 5 year relationship. I kept waiting and wasted five years of my youth. He was the reason for starting the rule.
And I think not having the one year rule worked against me in the 5 year relationship. I kept waiting and wasted five years of my youth. He was the reason for starting the rule.
Well clearly dating someone for a year and marrying them does not always work out well... so again what is the rush? The fact that he proposed to you because he knew after a year the gig was up shows that your rule is working against you. Oh well, to each their own. It is just clear you can hide things from someone for a year or a few years, so why rush attaching yourself to that person for life? Yes you are 38, but blowing off every guy who won't propose in a year means you risk being with idiots or very lonely. Most of us guys aren't jonesing to get married, even to the "one". I can't imagine wanting to date a girl who tells me after a year my time is up unless she has a ring...
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Ask people you know who are at least 30 and who are married/engaged. 85% of them became engaged at or near the one year mark I'd bet. You'll need to exclude anyone who started dating in high school because obviously they're too young but for the most part any couple I know who is married falls into the one year realm.
I think that thinking you could really know someone after just a year is... just grossly underestimating the complexity of what it is to be human. People are so incredibly intricate, not to mention they're constantly changing. A lot of the time, people have a hard time figuring out what they want or who they are or what they're looking for. And even when they think they know, they may really not.
Maybe some people would feel ready to make that kind of a commitment after a year, but a lot wouldn't.
Ask people you know who are at least 30 and who are married/engaged. 85% of them became engaged at or near the one year mark I'd bet. You'll need to exclude anyone who started dating in high school because obviously they're too young but for the most part any couple I know who is married falls into the one year realm.
Gotta make it count.
You're not an amusement park attraction or a vehicle of some sort, are you?
I'd totally marry a hot Transformer babe
You're not an amusement park attraction or a vehicle of some sort, are you?
I'd totally marry a hot Transformer babe
And wouldn't interwebbride have 2 "D"s?? I think interwebride was some sort of Fruedian slip.
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And wouldn't interwebbride have 2 "D"s?? I think interwebride was some sort of Fruedian slip.
also I dunno where the 2nd D would go